
HerMoney with Jean Chatzky
716 episodes — Page 1 of 15
Ep 527: How To Not Know: Making Peace With Financial Uncertainty
"I'm 56 with $3M saved. My husband says we can't afford for me to retire early. Is he right?"
Ep 526: This Mother's Day, Pass It On: Slow and Steady Still Wins
A Week In Her Wallet: A 63-Year-Old Preschool Director Saving For Her “Rich Enough Old Lady” Future
Ep 525: The Best Money Advice of All Time (According to the Experts)
"I'm 68 and newly retired. Should I tap my $850K nest egg to renovate my bathrooms, or borrow instead?"
Ep 524: Don't Claim Too Early: The Social Security Mistake That Could Cost You 30%
A Week In Her Wallet: A 48-Year-Old Working Mom Managing a Rental Property, Two Kids, and a Spring Break Road Trip
Ep 523: The Hidden Retirement Risk: What Happens To Your Money When You Can No Longer Manage It?
"My kids don't need their college savings anymore. Can I keep the tax benefits?"
Introducing: A Week In Her Wallet
Ep 522: Inflation, AI, Retirement, and Your Wallet: Planet Money Answers Your Biggest Money Questions
Why Playing It Safe With Your Money Might Be the Riskiest Thing You Can Do
bonusYou've heard the rules. Subtract your age from 100. Go 60/40. Play it safer as you get older. But what if those long-held guidelines have been steering you wrong and costing you? Yale finance professor James Choi returns to HerMoney to share groundbreaking research that could change the way you think about your investments forever. His new asset allocation formula goes far beyond the traditional rules of thumb, factoring in your income, your savings, your risk tolerance, and something most investment guidelines completely ignore: the future paychecks you haven't earned yet. In this episode, you'll learn: Why the "100 minus your age" rule and the classic 60/40 portfolio have a critical blind spot The concept of "human capital" and why your future paychecks function like a bond in your overall wealth portfolio How the formula shifts dramatically for mid-career investors, and why the size of your nest egg matters more than you think What near-retirees and women already in retirement should really know about how much risk to take on Resources mentioned in this episode: James Choi's allocation spreadsheet calculator The Wall Street Journal piece on James's research Jean's new book, The Forever Paycheck (coming Sept 2026) Subscribe to the free twice-weekly HerMoney newsletter Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 521Ep 521: The Economy Is Sending Mixed Signals: Here's What That Means for Your Wallet
Q1 2026 has been a lot. Tariffs. Oil above $100 a barrel. A war in the Middle East. Recession chatter. Stock market swings. And the creeping feeling that something has shifted in the economy… and not for the better. This week, Jean Chatzky sits down with economist and fan-favorite guest Kathryn Edwards for a full Q1 economic report card and a roadmap for what Q2 might bring. In this episode: The K-shaped economy explained Why the White House's 4% growth projection was never realistic, and how we got from boom talk to recession odds so fast How long oil prices need to stay elevated before the economic damage becomes truly lasting Why Kathryn is still an optimist, and why she believes Americans are resilient to change Links mentioned: Follow Kathryn on socials: @kedseconomist Subscribe to Optimist Economy wherever you get your podcasts Join InvestingFixx — your first two classes are free! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
“I’m 54. My advisor said fully funding my 401(k) won't make a big difference. Is he right?”
bonusWhen was the last time you felt truly in control of your time? Not your calendar, not your to-do list…your time? If the answer is "I can't remember," this episode is for you. Jean Chatzy is joined by Andy Hill, AFC, founder of Marriage, Kids, and Money, and author of Own Your Time: 10 Financial Steps to Put Your Family First and Escape the Corporate Grind. Together, they tackle your most pressing mailbag questions about the real tension so many of us are feeling right now: how do you balance saving aggressively for the future with actually enjoying your life today? In this episode: A 41-year-old high earner wants to know what to do with extra money beyond maxing out her accounts A 54-year-old asks whether her financial advisor is right that fully funding her 401 (k) won't make much difference. A 52-year-old is stretched thin between her career and caring for her aging mom and wonders: Is it financially irresponsible to step back during her peak-earning years? Andy also shares how he and his wife hit their Coast FIRE number, redesigned their lives around a 20-hour workweek, and what the first move looks like if you want to do the same. Ready to make your money work harder so you don't have to? Join InvestingFixx and learn how to build a portfolio that buys back your time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 520Ep 520: Why Smart, Hardworking Women Are Struggling With Money Right Now And What To Do About It
You're earning more than you ever have. You're doing everything you were told to do. So why does it still feel like you can't get ahead? This week, Jean sits down with Hanna Horvath, CFP, personal finance journalist, and writer behind the Substack Your Brain on Money, to talk about why so many women are struggling with money right now, and why it probably has a lot less to do with your choices than you think. In this episode, you'll learn: Why GDP being up and your life feeling hard are not contradictory, and what's actually driving the disconnect The concept of mattering, and why losing your sense of economic contribution can feel like an identity crisis The four money behaviors that show up when economic anxiety takes hold Why community investment is one of the most underrated strategies for financial resilience The one question to ask yourself before every spending decision Join InvestingFixx, our twice-monthly women-only investing club. Your first two classes are always free. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Stephanie Link's 2026 Market Outlook: International Stocks, Crypto, & the AI Power Boom
bonusMarkets are swinging. There's a war with Iran. Oil is spiking. And if your stomach has been dropping every time you look at your portfolio, Stephanie Link has something to say about that. Stephanie is Chief Investment Strategist and Portfolio Manager at Hightower Advisors, and a longtime CNBC contributor with more than 30 years of experience managing money through every kind of market cycle. She joined Jean Chatzky this week to cut through the noise and tell us exactly what she's doing with money right now. Stephanie shares her boldest market calls for the rest of 2026, including why she's bullish on Brazil and why its role in the AI power story is completely underappreciated, which sectors she's watching closely, and why the fear that AI is going to kill software companies is, in her words, overdone. In this episode, you'll learn: Why Stephanie says it's impossible to time the market, and what to do instead Her top three international markets right now The AI infrastructure food chain, and which industries stand to benefit most How much crypto she actually holds in her own portfolio The one book every new investor should read Connect with Stephanie Link: LinkedIn: Stephanie Link X: @Stephanie_Link Hightower Advisors: hightoweradvisors.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 519Ep 519: When Health Derails Wealth: How Women Can Safeguard Their Retirement
When retirement plans fall apart, we tend to assume it’s because someone overspent – maybe on travel, hobbies, or helping the kids a little too much. But, often, that’s not what does the real damage. It’s healthcare costs. Dr. Carolyn McClanahan – a physician turned fee-only financial planner – joins Jean Chatzky on this special episode of the HerMoney Podcast, sponsored by LIMRA, to share how unexpected health costs impact women, and how you can better prepare so they don’t derail your financial security. In the episode, they’ll break down: What people get wrong about healthcare costs – and why women face greater risks The Medicare misconceptions that can cost you How to prepare for the hidden threat of cognitive decline What you can do to better plan for unexpected healthcare costs After tuning in, complete this “Healthcare and Aging Game Plan” worksheet from our friends at LIMRA. It will help you outline your healthcare priorities, decisions, and anticipated expenses in retirement, as well as prepare you to talk through these topics with your financial advisor. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Is a Recession Coming? The Economist Behind the Most Accurate Indicator in History Weighs In
bonusOil prices have surged past $100 a barrel, three ships were struck near the Strait of Hormuz just yesterday, and the word "recession" is creeping back into the conversation. And we’re all feeling more than just a little bit anxious about what that means for our money. On this special bonus episode, Jean Chatzky sits down with Claudia Sahm, former Fed section chief, senior economist under President Obama, and creator of the Sahm Rule, a recession indicator that has been 100% accurate going back to 1959. Claudia breaks down exactly what's happening with oil prices and why it affects everything from your gas tank to your grocery bill to your retirement account. She explains what the Sahm Rule actually is, why she's cautioning people not to over-rely on it right now, and what she means when she says she just doesn't have "a good feeling" about this economy. Links mentioned: Claudia's Substack: Stay-At-Home Macro (SAHM) Claudia's writing at Bloomberg Opinion Join InvestingFixx — your first two classes are free! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 518Ep 518: What Your Doctor Isn't Telling You About Aging (And What It'll Cost You)
What if everything the wellness industry is selling you is actually making your life worse…not longer? This week, Jean Chatzky sits down with Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, oncologist, bioethicist, and author of Eat Your Ice Cream: Six Simple Rules for a Long, Healthy Life, for one of the most thought-provoking conversations we've had on HerMoney. Then we're joined by Lacey Garcia, founder and CEO of Willow, for this week's mailbag. Because once you've thought hard about how long you might actually live, the next question is: do you have the right financial guidance to match? Jean and Lacey walk through three real listener questions about when to hire a financial advisor, when a one-time planning session is enough, and how to stop feeling embarrassed about your numbers and start getting the help you deserve. Get matched with a vetted fiduciary financial advisor who specializes in working with women: hermoney.com/findanadvisor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Impact Investing for Women: Building Wealth and Shaping the Future With Janine Firpo
bonusOver the next decade, roughly $30 trillion is expected to move into the hands of women, and the question isn't just what women will inherit. It's what they'll build. This week, Jean Chatzky sits down with Janine Firpo, an impact investor and co-founder of Invest for Better, to talk about Our Sheconomy, a data-backed initiative that models what the world would look like if women had held equal economic and political power since 1925. But this episode isn't just about a hypothetical future. It's about the very real, very practical steps you can take right now — no matter how much (or how little) you have — to invest in alignment with your values without sacrificing returns. In this episode, you'll learn: How to audit your current portfolio for impact using free tools (including one Janine swears by Why ESG isn't a political buzzword — it's a risk management to How to start impact investing for as little as $100 Ready to put Janine's advice into action? Join InvestingFixx, Jean's twice-monthly women-only investing club, where expert stock pickers bring ideas to the table, and a community of women learn and win together. Your first two classes are always free. Resources: As You Sow – Invest Your Values Our Sheconomy Invest for Better Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 517EP 517: Breaking Free From Destructive Money Patterns with Therapist Kati Morton
EWhy do we keep doing the things we know aren’t good for our finances? Whether it’s emotional spending, avoiding a growing credit card balance, over-controlling every dollar, or saying “yes” to spending when we really mean “no”. So many of our money habits aren’t about math; they’re about emotion. This week, Jean Chatzky sits down with licensed marriage and family therapist and mental health educator Kati Morton, author of the new book Why Do I Keep Doing This?, to unpack the psychology behind the patterns that keep us stuck, especially when it comes to money. In this episode, we explore: The difference between healthy control and control that quietly sabotages us Why emotional spending happens — and how it differs from compulsive spending How financial insecurity in childhood can shape our careers, relationships, and money mindset Why the world feeling “out of control” can trigger impulsive financial decisions How women nearing retirement can navigate financial anxiety during major life transitions Practical tools to help break the cycle And if you’re ready to take control of your financial future in an intentional way, join us in InvestingFixx, our investing community designed to help you build confidence, clarity, and long-term wealth. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A Week In Her Wallet: A 55-Year-Old Tech Director Who Meal Preps Every Meal — Even for a Half Marathon
bonusWhat does a real week of spending look like for a 55-year-old director of technology earning $212,000 a year? In this episode of A Week in Her Wallet, Jean Chatzky talks with Kortne, a Texas-based executive, marathoner, and mom of two adult daughters, who tracked every dollar she spent over seven days. Kortne grew up in a working-class family in Detroit and says she’s intentional about enjoying her money now — especially when it comes to experiences. She’s run all six Abbott World Marathon Majors, travels frequently, and invests heavily in her health. At the same time, she’s focused on retirement planning, savings, and making sure her lifestyle remains sustainable long term. 🎧 Want to be featured on A Week in Her Wallet? Apply here. 💸 Ready to grow your investing skills? Join InvestingFixx — our women-only investing club. Your first two classes are free. 📩 Love the show? Leave us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts — it helps more women find the show. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 516Ep 516: Saved Enough but Afraid to Spend? A Simple Money System for Retirement Confidence
Have you saved and saved and saved… but now feel unsure about how to spend? On this week’s episode, Jean Chatzky sits down with entrepreneur and bestselling author Mike Michalowicz to talk about why managing money isn’t a math problem, it’s a behavior problem. Mike opens up about losing everything after selling two multi-million-dollar companies, how lifestyle inflation and ego nearly destroyed his finances, and the emotional moment with his daughter that forced him to completely rethink how money works. From there, he shares his Money Habit System, a simple but powerful framework for: Paying off high-interest credit card debt Creating “financial seasons” (Recovery, Fund, Activate, Balance) Learning how to spend confidently in retirement Managing money as a couple without conflict Using debit vs. credit strategically Breaking bad money habits with behavioral science 💼 And if part of building better money habits means finding a financial advisor who truly understands your goals, visit HerMoney.com/FindAnAdvisor to get matched for free with a vetted fiduciary through our partner, Willow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Should Crypto and Private Equity Be in Your 401(k)? A CFP Breaks It Down
bonusAre private equity, private credit, and crypto coming to your 401(k)? And if they do, should you invest? In this episode, Jean Chatzky sits down with CFP® professional and Summit Place Financial founder Liz Miller to break down the new push to allow alternative investments, such as private equity, private credit, and cryptocurrency, in retirement accounts. In This Episode We Cover: What private equity and private credit actually are (in plain English) Why Wall Street is eager to bring alternative investments into 401(k)s The truth about private equity fees (including the “2 and 20” model) How much crypto is reasonable in a diversified portfolio Tax pros and cons of holding crypto in a 401(k) vs. a brokerage account Why illiquidity matters in retirement investing ✨ Want deeper investing conversations, live market breakdowns, and portfolio strategy guidance? Join the HerMoney Investing Club. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 515Ep 515: Stability Over Stress: Building A Retirement Plan For Uncertain Times
If you’ve read economic headlines recently and thought, “Well, that’s not comforting,” you’re not alone. Market swings and broader economic uncertainty are enough to make even confident investors second-guess their strategies. And here’s the hard truth: Wall Street doesn’t care if you’re retiring next year. It doesn’t care if you’re five years away. And it definitely doesn’t care if you’re lying awake at night wondering if you’ve done “enough.” The good news? You can take steps to build confidence. On a special episode of the HerMoney Podcast, sponsored by LIMRA, Jean sits down with two of the smartest voices in retirement – Jason Fichtner, Executive Director of the LIMRA Retirement Income Institute and David Blanchett, head of retirement research at Prudential, a portfolio manager at PGIM and a LIMRA Retirement Income Institute Fellow – to talk about how to step off the emotional rollercoaster of the markets and build a retirement plan that feels stable, predictable and livable. In the episode, they’ll break down: Why market swings hit harder as retirement gets closer How protected income can help build a foundation for financial peace of mind Whether you should be worried about the future of Social Security Why waiting to claim Social Security can be one of your biggest wins – and strategies to make doing so easier Protected income can play a helpful role in creating more stability in retirement. If you’re curious and want to dig deeper, these two resources from LIMRA can help: Retirement planning can feel complex. This resource breaks down how fees and commissions work, so you know what to expect and what questions to ask. There’s plenty of conflicting information online about annuities. This guide walks through common misconceptions and explains the basics to help you better understand how they fit into retirement planning. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Single, Self-Sufficient & Paying More? How to Beat the Singles Tax
bonusMore American women are single than ever before, but our financial system is still built for couples. In this episode, Jean Chatzky sits down with finance journalist and author Renée Sylvestre-Williams to unpack the hidden financial penalties of being single (aka The Singles Tax) and what solo earners can do to protect themselves, build wealth, and plan for retirement on their own terms. We're talking about: What the “Singles Tax” really is—and where it hits hardest Why single women may need larger emergency funds and more downside protection Renting vs. buying: how to decide what’s right for you The most overlooked tax strategies for single women The biggest retirement planning mistake single women make 📚 Resources & Links: Join InvestingFixx, our judgment-free investing community designed to help you build confidence, grow your money, and make smart decisions. The Singles Tax: No-Nonsense Financial Advice for Solo Earners by Renée Sylvestre-Williams The Budgette Newsletter (Renée’s newsletter for single earners) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 514Ep 514: Why Every Woman Needs a “F*ck Off Fund” — And How It Evolves as You Age
EWhat does financial freedom really mean? Not just a healthy retirement account or a growing investment portfolio, but the ability to walk away from a situation that isn’t right. To say no. To have choices. In this episode, Jean sits down with writer and speaker Paulette Perhach, whose essay about building a “F*ck Off Fund” has resonated with women for nearly a decade. Together, they explore how financial independence evolves over a lifetime, from the early years of building an emergency cushion to the later years of protecting your retirement, your relationships, and your sense of agency. In this episode, we discuss: What a “F*ck Off Fund” really is, and why it doesn’t have to be a huge number to change your life Why financial independence is about more than money The power of small boundaries and everyday decisions How to talk to daughters, nieces, and younger women about money Why many women still feel financially fragile, even when they’re doing everything “right” How financial independence evolves as you approach retirement Resources Mentioned in This Episode Join InvestingFixx (HerMoney’s twice-monthly women’s investing club) Switch: How to Change Things When Change Is Hard The Paradox of Choice Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Premium Credit Cards: Are They Actually Worth the Fee? With Your Rich BFF Vivian Tu
bonusHow many credit cards is too many? Are premium travel cards actually worth those eye-popping annual fees? And what should you do when a card in your wallet stops pulling its weight? This week, Jean Chatzky is joined once again by money expert Vivian Tu for a listener mailbag all about credit cards, points, and smart strategies for getting real value, without paying unnecessary fees or interest. Together, they break down: How to decide if high-end travel cards like Amex Platinum or Chase Sapphire Reserve are actually worth the cost The smartest way to evaluate card perks — from lounge access to travel protections — in real dollar terms When it makes sense to downgrade a credit card How to use points efficiently without spending hours comparison shopping What to say if you call your credit card company to ask for a lower interest rate How to switch cards while protecting your credit score and account history 📈 Join our InvestingFixx club, your first month is free! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 513Ep 513: Vivian Tu on Building a Well Endowed Life That Buys You Time, Not Just Things
She’s back, and she brought her boldest advice yet. Vivian Tu, New York Times bestselling author and founder of Your Rich BFF, joins us to talk about her new book Well Endowed and why now is the time to rethink how you spend, save, and build the future you want. Vivian and Jean get real about what it means to be truly wealthy—not just financially, but emotionally and generationally. From burnout to budgeting to luxury trap purchases, this episode is your permission slip to stop spending for the wrong reasons and start aligning your money with what actually matters. What we’re diving into: The “values detox” every spender needs How to know if that splurge is really worth your time Why premium doesn’t always mean better (hello, MVP rule) What Vivian’s learned from the vibrant, retired women in her Miami building How to design a retirement that’s anything but tired Why estate planning is non-negotiable—even in your 30s Resources & Links: 💰 Order Well Endowed by Vivian Tu 🧠 Join the HerMoney InvestingFixx Club 📝 Subscribe to Vivian's Substack: enRICHed with Your Rich BFF 🎧 Listen to Vivian’s podcast: Networth and Chill Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A Week In Her Wallet: A 35-Year-Old Nurse and Money Coach Who Swears By Systems
bonusIn this week’s episode of A Week In Her Wallet, we head to New Jersey to follow Prisca, a 35-year-old nurse and part-time money coach who tracks every dollar with intention. From $8 therapy copays to $25 dance classes that light up her world, Prisca shows us how structure and joy can coexist in personal finance. Prisca’s week is packed with practical tips, emotional insights, and small moments that reveal big truths. Whether it’s her mantra of "aiming for calm" or her strategy to save before she spends, this is a blueprint for budgeting with purpose. Resources: Join our investing club! Your first month is completely free. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 513Ep 512: The Top Money Saving Tips We Wish We Knew Sooner With David Bach & Jean Chatzky
What do two financial pros with over 60 years of combined experience really wish they knew about money 30 years ago? In this very special crossover episode of HerMoney and The David Bach Show, Jean Chatzky sits down with longtime friend and bestselling author David Bach to share candid stories, big career lessons, and one bold new idea that could change retirement in America. Together, Jean and David trade their top financial insights, biggest regrets, and heartfelt advice for anyone navigating money, health, aging, and family in 2026. Resources: David’s Flat Tax Proposal The Automatic Millionaire (20th Anniversary Edition) HerMoney’s InvestingFixx Club Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Chief Economist Mark Zandi on What to Do With Your Money Right Now
bonusThis week, we’re cutting through the chaos and zeroing in on what matters most to your financial life: your investments, your home, and your next money moves. Jean sits down with Dr. Mark Zandi, Chief Economist at Moody’s Analytics, to unpack how global uncertainty, rising mortgage rates, and Trump-era policies are reshaping our economy. From the stock market rollercoaster to the housing “lock-in” crisis, Mark offers practical, down-to-earth advice for navigating it all. You’ll learn: Why Mark says, “Don’t even look at the market” (and what to do instead) What the mortgage “doom loop” means for Millennials, Gen Z, and retirees How long it could take to restore housing affordability in America Why homeownership is still a powerful wealth-building tool The truth about 50-year mortgages, portable loans, and whether they can help How to think smartly about helping your kids now vs. leaving a legacy later 💡 Further reading and listening: The American Housing and Economic Mobility Act “Die With Zero” by Bill Perkins The Inside Economics Podcast – hosted by Mark Zandi Join our InvestingFixx Club today! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 511Ep 511: From Nest Egg to Paycheck: Rethinking Retirement Planning
When people think about preparing for retirement, they usually think about saving. But the real challenge? Making sure your money lasts as long as you do. Morningstar’s Christine Benz joins us for a conversation about the smartest ways to prepare for retirement and make sure your money goes the distance. This episode is part of our new, monthly retirement-focused series, brought to you by LIMRA. With practical tips and real-world conversations, these episodes will give you the tools to help you feel more confident about what comes next. In this episode, Jean and Christine break down: Why there’s no one-size-fits-all retirement plan How to shift from a saving to a spending mindset in retirement The biggest retirement blind spots – and why they’re more challenging for women The steps you can take today to feel less overwhelmed about retirement planning 🛣️ ARE YOU ON TRACK? If you’re ready to start putting together a retirement plan that works for you, download LIMRA’s free Retirement Income Planning Starter Guide. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Roth IRAs, Crypto Regrets, and 401(k) Moves: Amanda Holden Answers Your Investing Questions
bonusYou’ve got questions, we’ve got Amanda Holden. In this special Mailbag episode of HerMoney, Jean is joined once again by investing expert and How to Be a Rich Old Lady author Amanda Holden to tackle your biggest investing dilemmas. We’re talking: What to actually do after opening a Roth IRA Whether crypto deserves a spot in your portfolio What to do with a $500,000 401(k) after a layoff Whether target-date funds are worth the cost And why diversification is non-negotiable ✨ Want to get smarter with your money in 2026? Join our women-only investing club, InvestingFixx, where expert stock pickers pitch ideas—and you help build the portfolio. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 510Ep 510: How to Be a Rich Old Lady (And Love Every Minute of It) with Amanda Holden
As we kick off 2026, it’s time to talk about the future—and the woman you want to become. Whether she’s rocking silver bangles on the beach or sipping coffee in her cabin, your Rich Old Lady deserves a life of financial freedom. And today’s guest is here to help you build it. Amanda Holden is the founder of Invested Development and the author of How to Be a Rich Old Lady: Your Guide to Easy Investing, Building Wealth, and Creating the Wild, Beautiful Life You Want. After a career in investment management (yes, she was once a finance bro), Amanda walked away from Wall Street to help over 25,000 women learn to invest, without shame, jargon, or feeling overwhelmed. In this episode, Jean and Amanda break down: Why the financial system feels so exclusive—and how to take your seat at the table How to build “the Gap” (your most powerful financial tool) Amanda’s hilarious (and helpful) dating metaphor for asset allocation Whether it’s too late to catch up on retirement (spoiler: it’s not) The surprising risks of today’s AI-driven stock market boom 💼 Want more support with your investing journey? Join our women-only investing club, InvestingFixx, today! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
When Inheritance Gets Messy: What You Owe Your Kids (and What You Don’t) with the Moneyist
bonusIs fair always equal when it comes to family and money? On this week’s HerMoney Mailbag, Jean Chatzky is joined by Quentin Fottrell, Managing Editor of Advice at MarketWatch and the voice behind The Moneyist column, to tackle the most emotionally charged financial questions from our listeners and his inbox. They dive into: 💸 Whether a promised $250K inheritance should include interest 🏡 How to avoid probate and protect your family home using a Lady Bird Deed 🧺 A listener whose parents are giving each son a $500K laundromat (but don’t want to give their spouses anything) Whether you're planning your estate, helping aging parents, or wondering how to protect family assets, this episode is packed with practical tips, legal insights, and thoughtful perspectives. Want more smart money advice from Jean? Subscribe, leave a review, and send your questions to [email protected]. Resources Mentioned: 🔗 The Moneyist at MarketWatch 🔗 HerMoney Facebook Group 🔗 Join the InvestingFixx Community Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 509Ep 509: Expert Investor Karen Finerman’s Bold Bets (and Red Flags) for 2026
The markets are still riding high, but if 2025 taught us anything, it’s that not everything that glitters is gold. In this episode, Jean Chatzky sits down with legendary investor and InvestingFixx co-founder Karen Finerman to unpack the wild ride of 2025: the highs, the flops, the lessons learned, and the big bets she’s making in 2026. We also talk about what makes a winning portfolio, how our InvestingFixx club beat the market, and how you can start building confidence with your own investments, one smart move at a time. In this episode: What Karen’s biggest winner of 2025 says about the market’s resilience Her biggest regret and what she’d do differently Whether the AI hype is starting to look like 1999 How to use the volatility index to make better decisions Why banks might be the most overlooked opportunity of 2026 What our InvestingFixx community got right and how they keep winning Looking for more? Join our InvestingFixx club Listen to How She Does It with Karen Finerman Karen Finerman’s viral end-of-year thread on X Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
“I just got laid off from big tech. What’s the smartest move I can make before I lose access to everything?”
bonusHow do you invest in yourself when life throws you off course? In this special HerMoney Mailbag episode, Jean Chatzky and Maha Abouelenein, author of 7 Rules of Self-Reliance, answer your real-life questions about navigating layoffs, career pivots, and side hustles. We answer your questions on: What to do immediately after a layoff to protect your career momentum How to transition to a less stressful career after parental leave Smart ways to supplement your income from home How to build your personal brand and start getting noticed on LinkedIn Why your network is your greatest asset and how to start using it We love your questions! Send them to us at [email protected]. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 508Ep 508: How to Invest in Yourself and Thrive In 2026
Ready to invest in yourself in 2026 and beyond? In this empowering episode, Jean sits down with Maha Abouelenein, global communications strategist and author of the bestselling book 7 Rules of Self-Reliance, to talk about how women can build confidence, create value, and stop waiting for permission to grow. Maha shares the pivotal story of how she rebuilt her life after a major career pivot, going from secretary to business partner in just four years, and how we can all tap into the mindset of self-reliance to create real opportunity, no matter where we’re starting from. We discuss: What it really means to invest in yourself—personally, professionally, and financially Why your reputation is currency, and how to build a personal brand that opens doors How to develop the five key traits of self-reliant people: initiative, adaptability, decision-making, leadership, and growth mindset Maha’s mantra “Stay low, keep moving”—and how it can help you block the noise and stay focused Why hustle culture is out, and value culture is in How to use small daily actions to build lasting change 🎧 Don’t miss our bonus Mailbag episode this Friday, where Maha returns to answer your real-life questions on personal branding and career transitions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A Week In Her Wallet: Second Marriage After "Devastating Divorce" Changed How I Spend $230K Salary
bonusThis week, we’re following Beth, a 52-year-old federal attorney from Kentucky who earns $230K a year and is raising a blended family, a 14-year-old son, two grown stepsons, and two adorable grandkids. Beth walks us through a week of intentional spending, including: Snagging $10K worth of high-end furniture on Facebook Marketplace for just $750 Treating herself to monthly DryBar blowouts Managing skyrocketing teen food bills And staying mindful through a hybrid work schedule and variable family expenses We’re looking for more real women to share their spending diaries. 👉 Fill out this quick form to get started Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 507Ep 507: Healthy to 100: The Real ROI of Connection in Retirement
As we head into a new year and set goals for our health, wealth, and happiness, there’s one powerful factor that’s often overlooked: social connection. In this episode, Jean Chatzky sits down with Ken Stern, longevity expert and author of the new book Healthy to 100: How Strong Social Ties Lead to Long Lives, to explore how the loneliness epidemic is quietly threatening both our health and our finances, and what we can do about it. Whether you're nearing retirement, navigating your second act, or just looking to improve your healthspan (not just lifespan!), this conversation is packed with practical tips on: How to build meaningful relationships without overspending Why third places (not home or work) are essential to healthy aging What other countries are doing right when it comes to retirement and lifelong learning How women, in particular, can fight isolation and plan for long, vibrant lives 📚 Resources: Get Ken Stern’s new book: Healthy to 100: How Strong Social Ties Lead to Long Lives Listen to Ken’s podcast: Century Lives by the Stanford Center on Longevity Join the HerMoney Community for more conversations like this 💬 Like what you hear? Please leave us a ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts: it helps more women find the show and join the conversation about living richer, bolder, more connected lives. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Your Money Map Replay: The Budgetnista’s Retirement Reality Check
bonusHow do you stick to a budget in retirement without feeling restricted, anxious, or deprived, especially when the cost of living keeps rising? This week on Your Money Map, Jean Chatzky is joined by Tiffany Aliche, better known as The Budgetnista, to talk about what budgeting and financial security really look like in retirement today, and why the old rules don’t always apply anymore. Why budgeting alone isn’t always enough, and what does help How to think about spending in retirement without feeling deprived The case for lowering overhead before you stop working Paying off a mortgage vs. keeping a low-interest loan Hidden programs and benefits that activate later in life Tiffany’s top three tips for anyone approaching retirement 🎧 More resources on building retirement income you can’t outlive: Visit protectedincome.org 📬 Sign up for the newsletter at protectedincome.org/subscribe In this episode, we cover:📘 Get Good With Money by Tiffany Aliche Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 506Ep 506: Should You Lease or Buy a Car? The Guide Every Driver Needs Now
Car buying can be one of the biggest — and most stressful — financial decisions we make. And too often, the auto industry feels like it was built to leave women out of the conversation. That ends today. In this episode, Jean Chatzky sits down with Chaya M. Milchtein, automotive educator, author of Mechanic Shop Femme’s Guide to Car Ownership, and all-around badass when it comes to helping women and LGBTQ+ folks feel confident in car buying, maintenance, and ownership. We also dive into: Why EVs aren't for everyone, and what to know before you commit How to figure out the true cost of car ownership The #1 negotiating mistake people make (and how to avoid it) How women can reclaim power in auto spaces that weren’t built for us What to do if you're buying a car for your kid, and peace of mind is your top priority 📚 Get Chaya’s book: Mechanic Shop Femme’s Guide to Car Ownership Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Mailbag: Taboo Money Questions with Gretchen Rubin (Yes, We Went There)
bonusThis week, we’re welcoming back someone who feels like part of the HerMoney podcast family: happiness expert and New York Times bestselling author Gretchen Rubin. Gretchen is back with Jean to tackle some of the trickiest, most taboo, and surprisingly relatable money dilemmas our listeners have shared, including: What to do when your bank suddenly shuts down your account with no explanation How to confidently ask your employer to sponsor you in a pageant (without sounding cringe) And how to professionally advocate for yourself when a colleague with less experience is making $20K more 🎧 Got a money question of your own? Write to us at [email protected] 📲 And be sure to check out Since You Asked wherever you get your podcasts! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 505Ep 505: From Financially In the Dark to Fully In Control: Jen Hatmaker’s Wake-Up Call
EWhen bestselling author and podcast host Jen Hatmaker’s 26-year marriage imploded, she realized something shocking: even though she was the breadwinner, she had no idea how much money she made… or how to access it. In this deeply honest and empowering conversation, Jen sits down with Jean Chatzky to discuss her financial “wake-up” — how she went from completely disconnected to financially independent after divorce. Together, they unpack how faith, purity culture, and traditional gender roles shaped her relationship with money, and how she ultimately took back control. What You’ll Hear In This Episode: Why she went to an attorney, not a therapist, after finding out about her husband’s affair The cultural and religious beliefs that kept her from managing her money Jen’s 90-day crash course to financial independence (and the exact checklist she followed) How friendships and solo travel helped her heal emotionally and financially Her evolving relationship with spirituality after stepping away from church Jen’s advice for women who feel they’re “late” to their own financial lives Resources & Links: Jen Hatmaker’s memoir: AWAKE Jen’s podcast: For The Love Follow Jen on Instagram More financial tips and support: HerMoney.com If you enjoyed this episode, please leave us a review on Apple Podcasts and share it with a friend who needs to hear it. Subscribe for more stories of reinvention, resilience, and taking control of your financial future. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A Week In Her Wallet: A 47-year-old who hasn’t paid credit card interest in 20 years
bonusThis week on A Week In Her Wallet, we meet Megan, a 47-year-old office manager living on Long Island with her husband. Together they earn around $200,000, but keep most of their spending separate — and it works. Megan hasn’t paid a cent in credit card interest in over two decades and recently spent just $400 in a week, all while training for her fifth marathon. Tune in as she shares: Why she keeps her money separate from her spouse, and how they make it work The real costs of marathon training How she budgeted for a trip to Barcelona without touching savings Her unique take on tipping, impulse buying, and personal finance independence 🎯 Ready to understand your own money style? Take our MoneyType™ quiz 💡 Want to build better habits? Join our InvestingFixx club. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Patreon PREVIEW: "Can You Rebuild Your Retirement at 68?"
bonusToday on the HerMoney Podcast, we're bringing you something special — an exclusive preview of one of our brand-new Patreon-only AMA episodes. In this series, Jean sits down one-on-one with real listeners to talk through their biggest financial questions in real time. In this episode, you’ll meet Donna, a 68-year-old listener who is rebuilding her financial life from scratch after the end of a 30-year marriage, years out of the workforce, and time spent navigating disability. Now she’s back at work full-time — earning nearly double what she made before — and she’s trying to figure out how to use this new income to build the retirement she wants. Jean and Donna talk through: What it feels like to step back into the workforce at 68 How to choose between Roth and traditional contributions How to invest when you feel “behind” on retirement What to do when advisors tell you your portfolio is “too small.” And how to finally create a plan after years of trying You’ll hear the first half of their conversation here. To listen to the full episode — plus all of our new bonus content — join us on Patreon. 👉 https://www.patreon.com/cw/HerMoneyPodcast As a Patreon member, you’ll get: 1–2 exclusive bonus episodes every month AMA call-in mailbags with Jean A lively private chat with the HerMoney community Ad-free listening across the entire feed Early access to submit your money questions Access to a special live event we’re hosting in the new year If you love having more HerMoney in your week, we’d love to have you join us. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ep 504Ep 504: Is College a Smart Investment Anymore? Let’s Talk Numbers
For decades, college was considered the ultimate launching pad—your ticket to a good job, a stable life, and financial freedom. But today, that path feels a whole lot blurrier. In this episode, Jean sits down with leading financial expert Ric Edelman, whose new book The Truth About College pulls back the curtain on what higher education really delivers—and where it falls short. Together, they dive into: When college still makes financial sense—and when it really doesn’t How families can make smarter decisions together Why trade schools, gap years, and community college deserve a second look The emotional toll of student debt (and what parents often miss) How adults can tap into lifelong learning without breaking the bank More from HerMoney: 💸 Want to join our investing club or try our coaching program? [https://hermoney.com/fixx/] 📰 Get our free weekly newsletter: [https://hermoney.com/subscribe/] ✨If this episode helped you see things in a new way, leave us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Your Money Map Replay: How Julie Wainwright Rebuilt Her Life, Emptied Her 401(k), and Created The RealReal
bonusIn this powerful and inspiring episode of Your Money Map, Jean Chatzky sits down with entrepreneur and author Julie Wainwright, founder of The RealReal, to talk about failure, reinvention, and why it’s never too late to bet on yourself. She shares candid stories from her new book, Time to Get Real: How I Built a Billion Dollar Business that Rocked the Fashion Industry, and the hard-won lessons she learned about leadership, raising capital as a woman over 50, and taking calculated risks — including the moment she emptied her 401(k) to fund her vision. Topics We Cover: How Julie rebuilt her career after Pets.com The surprising advantages of launching a business later in life Facing ageism and gender bias in venture capital Why she bet her retirement savings on herself The messy truths behind entrepreneurship Advice for women starting over at any age 👉 Resources & Links: 🔗 Learn more about retirement income at ProtectedIncome.org 🔗 Sign up for free retirement advice & news delivered straight to your inbox: protectedincome.org/subscribe Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices